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Oregon Institute of Technology graduates earn $67,660 annually while paying just $16,391 net cost, making it the clear value leader among the state's civil engineering programs. This earning power matters in Oregon's construction boom, where companies like Intel's semiconductor facilities and Nike's campus expansions create steady demand for infrastructure expertise. The $20,000+ cost gap between public options like Portland State ($12,932) and private University of Portland ($36,371) reflects dramatically different financial strategies for the same career outcomes.
6
Programs
$12,932 – $36,371
Net Price Range
$62,156
Avg. Program Earnings
63.9%
Avg. Graduation Rate

6 Civil Engineering Programs

Program rankings
# School Net Price Program Earnings In-State Tuition Graduation Rate Acceptance Rate
1 $12,932 $57,860 $11,238 53.1% 93.1%
2 $16,391 $67,660 $12,687 59.1% 92.6%
3 $17,722 $63,430 $12,594 51.2% 79.0%
4 $19,568 $63,430 $13,494 70.6% 82.5%
5 $36,371 $58,402 $54,900 80.4% 92.5%
6 $29,981 $40,940 68.7% 91.7%

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes Oregon Institute of Technology the best value for civil engineering?

Oregon Tech delivers the highest graduate earnings at $67,660 while maintaining a reasonable $16,391 net cost and the lowest debt load at $19,666. The 59.10% graduation rate shows solid student success despite the technical rigor.

How do public and private civil engineering costs compare in Oregon?

Public schools range from $12,932 to $19,568 in net costs, while private options like University of Portland jump to $36,371. Despite paying nearly triple, private school graduates don't earn significantly more than their public counterparts.

Does graduation rate correlate with program cost in Oregon civil engineering?

University of Portland achieves the highest graduation rate at 80.40% but costs $36,371 annually. Oregon State's main campus follows at 70.60% for just $19,568, suggesting diminishing returns on private school premiums.

Net price reflects the average cost after grants and scholarships for first-time, full-time students. See our methodology for details.